A Floating City With Junkyard Roots: Yazzy's at www.williamverdult.com

Only minutes before their launching, on Friday around noon, a group of people, mostly in their 20s and 30s, was still preparing for the voyage down the Hudson River. In between bites of jelly doughnuts, the crew, dressed in hipster hillbilly chic, hustled to clean up pieces of scrap metal and ready the boats. In the middle stood the artist known as Swoon in a bright yellow rain poncho and jeans.

It is because of Swoon that this collection of artists, carpenters, musicians, filmmakers, seafarers and hangers-on was here. For the past year she has been preparing for this project, a floating trip that will take the group down the Hudson, from Troy through the harbor of New York to Long Island City, Queens, where the fleet will dock at the Deitch Studios and remain stationed as part of an exhibition beginning Sept. 7.

The project, “Swimming Cities of Switchback Sea,” Swoon’s latest large-scale work, is part floating artwork, part performance, part mobile utopia and seemingly part summer camp for grown-up artsy kids. For the work Swoon, 30, collaborated with musicians from the Minneapolis band Dark Dark Dark; the writer Lisa D’Amour, who contributed a play to be performed at stops along the way; the musician Sxip Shirey; and a host of others.

In the summers of 2006 and ’07 Swoon, known primarily as a street artist, did a similar project, “Miss Rockaway Armada,” in which she and a group of artists boated down the Mississippi on a large flotilla. It was essentially an experiment in communal life, and while many who took part are involved in “Swimming Cities,” the new work is more focused on the aesthetic aspect of the vessels

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Posted on Monday, August 18, 2008 at 03:10PM by Registered CommenterAP in | CommentsPost a Comment | References1 Reference | EmailEmail | PrintPrint

Task Force of Small Business Entrepreneurial Leadership - Yazzy's at www.williamverdult.com

Posted on Monday, August 18, 2008 at 03:04PM by Registered CommenterAP in | CommentsPost a Comment | EmailEmail | PrintPrint

The Original Book of Appraisals, Yazzy's at www.williamverdult.com

The Original Book of Appraisals
Book of Original Appraisals

The Recent Appraisal Book provides you with up to date hard copies of appraisals recently conducted by the National Institute of Appraisers. This book provides credability for Verdult art and insight into buy/sell, lending and insurance decisions.

For: appraisers, buyers, sellers, lenders, and owners
Full color documents.
Provides the latest formal appraisals of William Verdult artwork.
Posted on Monday, August 18, 2008 at 03:03PM by Registered CommenterAP in | CommentsPost a Comment | EmailEmail | PrintPrint

Certificate of Authenticity and Insurance Appraisal - William Verdult Art

Certificate of Authenticity and Insurance Appraisal

Need a Certificate of Authenticity and Insurance Appraisal (or COA)? We provide all types including originals, lithographs/reproductions, and sculptures. A new certificate of authenticity is recommended periodically. To have your Verdult art work evaluated and a Certificate of Authenticity and Insurance Appraisal issued complete the Pay here then complete your Appraisal Worksheets. After approval certificates are sent via second day air, return receipt requested.
William Verdullt Certificate of Authenticity and Insurance Appraisal
Leading auction houses consistently state that Yazzy's  'www.williamverdult.com and www.verdultgallery.com are the places to go for Verdult art.  

With over 3,000 plus auctions we provide cash sales, appraisals and auction records to leading on-line art sites. We are the recognized and leading authority on the William Verdult art market.

Get your Certificate of Authenticity from the Corporation who own any and all word-wide rights to Verdult Art. More Info>>
 
Posted on Monday, August 18, 2008 at 03:00PM by Registered CommenterAP in | CommentsPost a Comment | EmailEmail | PrintPrint

The Mythic Imagination of Beckmann in Exile, Yazzy's at www.williamverdult.com


“Self-Portrait With Horn,” a 1938 painting by Max Beckmann.

According to the New York Times, Max Beckmann’s “Self-Portrait With Horn” is one of the finest treasures of the Neue Galerie, the sumptuous Upper East Side bastion of modern German and Austrian art. Painted in brusque, brushy strokes in high-contrast darks and lights, it depicts the artist in a black-and-orange striped dressing gown holding up a silver hunter’s horn in one sausage-fingered hand. He looks sideways with an intent expression as though he had sounded a note and was awaiting an answering response. Or he may be listening for the hounds of war.

It was 1938, and Beckmann was nearing his mid-50s when he made “Self-Portrait With Horn.” The year before he and his wife, Quappi, fled Germany, where he had been one of the country’s most esteemed and successful artists until the Nazis rose to power and declared him a degenerate. In his painting he portrays himself as an artist in exile who fears that his art will no longer be “heard.”

The story behind Beckmann’s self-portrait is told in a brief, illuminating book by the art historian Jill Lloyd recently published by the Neue Galerie. The museum has celebrated the occasion by assembling a small exhibition of portraits by other German artists centered around “Self-Portrait With Horn” and two other Beckmanns from the 1920s, a self-portrait and a small political allegory.

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Posted on Wednesday, August 13, 2008 at 10:29AM by Registered CommenterAP in | CommentsPost a Comment | References1 Reference | EmailEmail | PrintPrint
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